Great Falls Manufacturing Co. v. Attorney General

124 U.S. 581, 8 S. Ct. 631, 31 L. Ed. 527, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1896
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedFebruary 6, 1888
Docket605
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 124 U.S. 581 (Great Falls Manufacturing Co. v. Attorney General) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Great Falls Manufacturing Co. v. Attorney General, 124 U.S. 581, 8 S. Ct. 631, 31 L. Ed. 527, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1896 (1888).

Opinion

Me. Justice HablaN,

after stating the case as above reported, delivered the opinion of the court.

*595 The bill alleges that the land and water rights described hi the published notice of the Attorney General are substantially-those which would have been taken if the United States had adopted and executed Plan A, as described in the report of the arbitrators in 1863. In respect to that plan, the arbitrators decided that if it were adopted and executed the plaintiff would be entitled to receive $63,766, and, in addition, to retain the right of using the remainder of the water, by means of proper canal and bulkhead appliances on the Virginia shore of the river. While the company contends that its enjoyment of the right so reserved cannot lawfully be interfered with, it is not clear that it means to insist upon the award of 1863, in respect to said amount, as absolutely binding upon the United States in proceedings had under the act of 1882. It. will be remembered that the award of 1863 covered four alternative plans for the Potomac dam of the Washington aqueduct. The United States adopted and executed only Plan 4, and thereby manifested its purpose not to adopt and execute Plan A. Neither the Government nor the company is bound by that award, so far as it relates to plan.® which the United States did not adopt and execute. The present inquiry in respect to land or water rights taken from the plaintiff must, therefore, be conducted with reference to their value — not in 1863, when the Government declined to take them, but — in 1883, at the time of their being condemned for public use. under the act of 1882. It is, consequently, an immaterial circumstance that the award of 1863 reserved to the company, as against the United States, the right to maintain a canal and bulkhead across and upon the land of the United States, on the Virginia shore of the Potomac. No such reservation is made by the act of 1882, and the officers charged with its execution were not required to concede any such right, though, of course, the United-States are bound to make just compensation to the company for property rights of whatever description taken from it for, and appropriated to, public use.

Much stress seems to be laid upon the allegation in the bill —which the appellant'insists must be taken as true- — -that the Secretary of War, by his servants and agents, took possession of' *596 lands of the plaintiff, which are “ not within any description made, surveyed, or traced.” by him, and has used the same for the purpose of constructing the proposed dam across Conn’s Island and to the Yirginia shore. As the act of Congress provided that the Secretary of War, upon the publication by the Attorney General of the required notice, “ may take possession of the premises embraced in the survey and map,” it is contended that his possession of the company’s land and water rights is without authority of law, and constitutes a mere' trespass; in which case, it is argued, the United States are not legally bound to make compensation to the plaintiff. It is clear that the allegation that the lands taken for the purposes of the dam in question are not embraced by the survey, is not to be literally construed. The plaintiff surely does not mean that all the lands taken by the Secretary are outside of the survey made under his order; but, only that such lands are not entirely within its limits, and that the survey was not sufficiently accurate “to be the foundation of passing the title to .the land and water rights ” of the complainant necessary to be taken for the purposes of said act.” The plaintiff admits that a survey was, in fact, made, and that the Attorney General published a notice based upon it. And there is no suggestion that the Secretary has taken any land other than that intended to be embraced within the survey, of which the Attorney General gave notice by publication. Taking all the allegations of the bill together, we understand the complaint only to be that the survey and notice were not such as in law justified the Secretary of "War in taking possession'of the lands upon which the proposed dam was being constructed when the suit was brought. But even if it be true that some part of the land actually occupied by the Government is not within the survey and map, still the United States are under an obligation imposed by the Constitution to make just compensation for all that has been in fact taken and is retained for the proposed dam. While Congress supposed, that a survey and map could be made with such accuracy as to embrace all the land necessary, under any circumstances, for the purposes indicated in the act of 1882, and while provision is made whereby the *597 owners of lands, covered by such survey and map, can obtain just compensation, the act also opens the Court of Claims to every person who, by the construction of the works in question, has been injured in any property right, provided that, within a given time, such person file his petition in that court, setting forth his right or title and the amount claimed by him as .damages. So that if the Secretary of War, who was invested with large discretion in determining what land was actually required to accomplish in the best manner the object Congress had in view, found it necessary to. tyke, and has. taken and used, and still holds lands of the plaintiff1 for'the proposed dam, which happen not to be covered by the survey and map, the United States are as much bound to make just compensation therefor as if such lands had been actually embraced in that survey and map. Of course, we are not to be understood as saying that the Secretary of War could, by any act of his, bind the United States to pay for lands taken by him which, manifestly, had no substantial connection with the construction of the dam across Conn’s Island to the Yirginia shore. It- is sufficient to say that the record discloses nothing showing that he has taken more land than was reasonably necessary for the purposes described in the act of Congress, or that he did not honestly and reasonably exercise the discretion with which he was invested; and, consequently, the Government is under a constitutional obligation to make compensation for any property or property-right taken, used, and held by him for the purposes indicated in the act of Congress, whether it is embraced or described in said survey or map, or not. United States v. Great Falls Manufacturing Co., 112 U. S. 645, 656.

In reference to the allegation that the survey and map made by the Secretary were not sufficiently accurate, and that the notice published by the Attorney General was materially defective, it may be further said that all such objections were waived by the company when, proceeding under the act of 1882, it invoked the jurisdiction of the Court of Claims to give judgment against-the United States for such compensation as it .was entitled to receive for its land and water rights. Even *598

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Bluebook (online)
124 U.S. 581, 8 S. Ct. 631, 31 L. Ed. 527, 1888 U.S. LEXIS 1896, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/great-falls-manufacturing-co-v-attorney-general-scotus-1888.